Electrified

Ernie Hines

Sale - Sale price $45.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $45.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Sale - Sale price $45.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $45.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Description

Electrified (All-Analog) is a 2026 audiophile reissue of Ernie Hines’s cult 1972 soul album, newly cut in an all‑analog chain from the original We Produce/Stax tapes and issued on heavyweight black and magenta vinyl. The record remains his only full‑length release, an underground Memphis set that blends churchy Southern soul, tighter funk rhythms, and socially conscious songwriting into a warm, gritty early‑70s sound. Tracks like “Our Generation,” “Electrified Love,” “A Better World,” and “Sugar Plum” showcase Hines’s expressive, gospel‑trained vocals over horn‑punctuated grooves and deep, rolling bass, with arrangements that feel both polished and raw.

The all‑analog edition emphasizes the album’s sonic strengths: Real Gone Music and We Produce market it specifically for turntable listeners, with small‑batch pressings (including limited magenta vinyl and bundle/test‑press packages) aimed at collectors. The new cut keeps the original stereo mix but offers greater detail and low‑end presence than many earlier reissues, letting the rhythm section punch and the organ, guitar, and horn parts breathe in the soundstage. For longtime soul fans and newer crate‑diggers, Electrified (All‑Analog) functions as a revival of a once‑overlooked Stax‑era gem, giving Hines’s lone LP the audiophile treatment usually reserved for far more famous titles.

Electrified (All-Analog) is a 2026 audiophile reissue of Ernie Hines’s cult 1972 soul album, newly cut in an all‑analog chain from the original We Produce/Stax tapes and issued on heavyweight black and magenta vinyl. The record remains his only full‑length release, an underground Memphis set that blends churchy Southern soul, tighter funk rhythms, and socially conscious songwriting into a warm, gritty early‑70s sound. Tracks like “Our Generation,” “Electrified Love,” “A Better World,” and “Sugar Plum” showcase Hines’s expressive, gospel‑trained vocals over horn‑punctuated grooves and deep, rolling bass, with arrangements that feel both polished and raw.

The all‑analog edition emphasizes the album’s sonic strengths: Real Gone Music and We Produce market it specifically for turntable listeners, with small‑batch pressings (including limited magenta vinyl and bundle/test‑press packages) aimed at collectors. The new cut keeps the original stereo mix but offers greater detail and low‑end presence than many earlier reissues, letting the rhythm section punch and the organ, guitar, and horn parts breathe in the soundstage. For longtime soul fans and newer crate‑diggers, Electrified (All‑Analog) functions as a revival of a once‑overlooked Stax‑era gem, giving Hines’s lone LP the audiophile treatment usually reserved for far more famous titles.

Details
detail icon barcode
Barcode :
0848064020479 0848064020431
detail icon publisher
Publisher :
Real Gone Music Real Gone Music
detail icon genre
Genre :
R&B/Soul
Product Dimensions
detail icon width
Length x Width x Height :
12.5 x 12.5 x 0.5 in 12.5 x 12.5 x 0.5 in
detail icon weight
Weight :
250 g 250 g

Electrified

Ernie Hines

Sale - Sale price $45.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $45.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Sale - Sale price $45.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $45.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Description

Electrified (All-Analog) is a 2026 audiophile reissue of Ernie Hines’s cult 1972 soul album, newly cut in an all‑analog chain from the original We Produce/Stax tapes and issued on heavyweight black and magenta vinyl. The record remains his only full‑length release, an underground Memphis set that blends churchy Southern soul, tighter funk rhythms, and socially conscious songwriting into a warm, gritty early‑70s sound. Tracks like “Our Generation,” “Electrified Love,” “A Better World,” and “Sugar Plum” showcase Hines’s expressive, gospel‑trained vocals over horn‑punctuated grooves and deep, rolling bass, with arrangements that feel both polished and raw.

The all‑analog edition emphasizes the album’s sonic strengths: Real Gone Music and We Produce market it specifically for turntable listeners, with small‑batch pressings (including limited magenta vinyl and bundle/test‑press packages) aimed at collectors. The new cut keeps the original stereo mix but offers greater detail and low‑end presence than many earlier reissues, letting the rhythm section punch and the organ, guitar, and horn parts breathe in the soundstage. For longtime soul fans and newer crate‑diggers, Electrified (All‑Analog) functions as a revival of a once‑overlooked Stax‑era gem, giving Hines’s lone LP the audiophile treatment usually reserved for far more famous titles.

Electrified (All-Analog) is a 2026 audiophile reissue of Ernie Hines’s cult 1972 soul album, newly cut in an all‑analog chain from the original We Produce/Stax tapes and issued on heavyweight black and magenta vinyl. The record remains his only full‑length release, an underground Memphis set that blends churchy Southern soul, tighter funk rhythms, and socially conscious songwriting into a warm, gritty early‑70s sound. Tracks like “Our Generation,” “Electrified Love,” “A Better World,” and “Sugar Plum” showcase Hines’s expressive, gospel‑trained vocals over horn‑punctuated grooves and deep, rolling bass, with arrangements that feel both polished and raw.

The all‑analog edition emphasizes the album’s sonic strengths: Real Gone Music and We Produce market it specifically for turntable listeners, with small‑batch pressings (including limited magenta vinyl and bundle/test‑press packages) aimed at collectors. The new cut keeps the original stereo mix but offers greater detail and low‑end presence than many earlier reissues, letting the rhythm section punch and the organ, guitar, and horn parts breathe in the soundstage. For longtime soul fans and newer crate‑diggers, Electrified (All‑Analog) functions as a revival of a once‑overlooked Stax‑era gem, giving Hines’s lone LP the audiophile treatment usually reserved for far more famous titles.

  • Vinyl